Rollup merge of #31296 - steveklabnik:gh31249, r=alexcrichton

Rustdoc will automatically wrap things in main, but this doesn't work
here.

Fixes #31249
This commit is contained in:
Manish Goregaokar 2016-01-30 17:57:17 +05:30
commit f66d3c5566
1 changed files with 11 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -24,6 +24,7 @@ Cargo will automatically generate a simple test when you make a new project.
Here's the contents of `src/lib.rs`:
```rust
# fn main() {}
#[test]
fn it_works() {
}
@ -75,6 +76,7 @@ So why does our do-nothing test pass? Any test which doesn't `panic!` passes,
and any test that does `panic!` fails. Let's make our test fail:
```rust
# fn main() {}
#[test]
fn it_works() {
assert!(false);
@ -145,6 +147,7 @@ This is useful if you want to integrate `cargo test` into other tooling.
We can invert our test's failure with another attribute: `should_panic`:
```rust
# fn main() {}
#[test]
#[should_panic]
fn it_works() {
@ -175,6 +178,7 @@ Rust provides another macro, `assert_eq!`, that compares two arguments for
equality:
```rust
# fn main() {}
#[test]
#[should_panic]
fn it_works() {
@ -209,6 +213,7 @@ make sure that the failure message contains the provided text. A safer version
of the example above would be:
```rust
# fn main() {}
#[test]
#[should_panic(expected = "assertion failed")]
fn it_works() {
@ -219,6 +224,7 @@ fn it_works() {
That's all there is to the basics! Let's write one 'real' test:
```rust,ignore
# fn main() {}
pub fn add_two(a: i32) -> i32 {
a + 2
}
@ -238,6 +244,7 @@ Sometimes a few specific tests can be very time-consuming to execute. These
can be disabled by default by using the `ignore` attribute:
```rust
# fn main() {}
#[test]
fn it_works() {
assert_eq!(4, add_two(2));
@ -299,6 +306,7 @@ missing the `tests` module. The idiomatic way of writing our example
looks like this:
```rust,ignore
# fn main() {}
pub fn add_two(a: i32) -> i32 {
a + 2
}
@ -327,6 +335,7 @@ a large module, and so this is a common use of globs. Let's change our
`src/lib.rs` to make use of it:
```rust,ignore
# fn main() {}
pub fn add_two(a: i32) -> i32 {
a + 2
}
@ -377,6 +386,7 @@ put a `tests/lib.rs` file inside, with this as its contents:
```rust,ignore
extern crate adder;
# fn main() {}
#[test]
fn it_works() {
assert_eq!(4, adder::add_two(2));
@ -432,6 +442,7 @@ running examples in your documentation (**note:** this only works in library
crates, not binary crates). Here's a fleshed-out `src/lib.rs` with examples:
```rust,ignore
# fn main() {}
//! The `adder` crate provides functions that add numbers to other numbers.
//!
//! # Examples